Beth's Best Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe- Entertaining with Beth (2024)

byBeth Le Manach

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This Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe is one of my favorite cookie recipes using pantry staples you probably already have sitting in the cupboard and refrigerator. They are crispy on the outside and soft and chewy and full of peanut butter flavor, you’ll never buy store-bought cookies again!

They rival my Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Snickerdoodle Cookies and Kitchen Sink Cookie recipes as my favorites. But you can try all 3 recipes and decide which one you like best!

For a fancier cookie recipe try my French Macaron Recipe or my French Madeleines. Both are equally delicious!

Beth's Best Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe- Entertaining with Beth (1)

Why You’ll Love This Recipe:

  • The best part is they whip up so quickly and easily, no need to chill the dough either, so as soon as the craving strikes, you’ll be quickly rewarded!
  • They are crispy on the outside and soft and chewy on the inside! Giving you the best of both worlds!
  • They are not overly sweet and the recipe uses a little extra butter to give them a melt-in-your-mouth texture.

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The Ingredients:

  • The ingredients for peanut butter cookies are so basic you probably have all of them sitting in your fridge and pantry.
  • Butter If you live in the states use Land O’ Lakes Salted Butter. This butter is more flavorful than unsalted and will give your cookies the best buttery flavor. If you live outside the U.S. then use unsalted butter since international salted butter is pretty salty!
  • Peanut Butter Read the label! Only buy peanut butter has 1 ingredient in it: Peanuts. (No added oils, sugars, or salt.) You’ll get the best peanut flavor this way.
  • White Sugar I use white sugar for the crispy edges around the cookie and the cross-hatch pattern
  • Brown Sugar I use brown sugar for the chewy interior of the cookie
  • Egg The egg will add softness and richness to the cookie
  • Vanilla will sweeten the cookie and add flavor without using more sugar
  • Flour I use regular all-purpose flour for this recipe
  • Salt will heighten the flavor of the cookie
  • Baking Soda will give your cookie a nice chewiness to it. You can swap for baking powder if you have to, but I find the texture of cookies is best with baking soda.
  • Optional Chopped Raw Peanuts are a nice touch if you like a peanut butter cookie with a little bit of crunch in it. And if you have leftover peanuts you can put them to use in my Peanut Brittle Recipe, a great food gift idea for holiday gifting!

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Using Natural Peanut Butter

  • There can be a huge swing of variables in natural peanut butter. Some have more oil, some are harder to stir, some are creamier, some are thicker etc.
  • I have tried many options and keep coming back to Trader Joe’s Creamy No Salt Peanut Butter as the clear winner for this recipe.
  • You can use any leftover peanut butter for my decadent Chocolate Peanut Butter Pie or my Easy Peanut Butter Sauce for Ice Cream.
  • The natural peanut butter will give you a peanut butter cookie with the best peanut butter flavor.
  • Be sure your butter is also very soft, this will help the peanut butter and its oil, incorporate better.
  • You can choose creamy for a smoother texture or chunky for a more textured cookie.

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Why do you make fork marks on peanut butter cookies?

  • Peanut butter is a pretty dense ingredient. When you add it to cookie dough the cookies will bake with this density.
  • Adding the criss-cross pattern or “hash marks” to your cookies allows them to bake evenly.
  • This will give you a crispy exterior around the edges and a chewy interior where the hash marks are formed. Aside from being functional, it also looks pretty on the cookies as well!
  • Dip your fork in flour first before making the hash marks, this will prevent your fork from sticking.

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Choosing the Best Fork

  • This may seem like a strange consideration, but I really love when peanut butter cookies are covered in the cross-hatch pattern, for the simple reason that you get more nooks and crannies in the cookie that way, which provides more crispy parts on top of the cookie.
  • This is a wonderful contrast to the chewy interior.
  • I’ve found regular dinner forks are not quite large enough. Their tines come up too short for a large cookie.
  • So I’ve found vintage forks, which tend to be larger and heavier work the best!
  • Or you can also size your cookie down to a smaller ball to allow your fork to reach across it.

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Scooping the Dough With an Ice Cream Scoop

  • Using a 2-ounce ice cream scoop will create nice rustic edges to your cookie, which again like the cross-hatching, will add more crispiness to the cookie
  • It’s also easier than rolling the dough into a ball by hand
  • I find a cookie scoop also helps maintain the equal size of each cookie which helps them bake at the same rate and prevent any fights breaking out among the children!

How Long to Bake Peanut Butter Cookies?

  • If you want a soft peanut butter cookie bake them for 13-minutes, then allow them to cool on their tray to set up even further.
  • For crispy on the outside and chewy on the inside peanut butter cookie let them bake for about 15 minutes.

Storing The Cookies and Dough

  • Once baked you can store the cookies in an air-tight container, they are best eaten within 3-5 days
  • Or you can refrigerate the dough for up to 5 days and bake as needed
  • Or you can freeze the dough in an airtight, freezer-safe container, for up to a month, and defrost it in the refrigerator overnight before baking.

More Cookie Recipes!

  • Snickerdoodle Cookies
  • Chocolate Hazelnut Linzer Cookies
  • Easiest Christmas Cookies EVER!
  • Double Chocolate Chunk Cookie

If You Enjoyed This Recipe

Please Leave a rating and review below

Beth's Best Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe- Entertaining with Beth (7)

Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe

Yield: 12 cookies

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 13 minutes

Total Time: 33 minutes

Learn how to make my Best Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe. So good and easy you'll never buy store-bought again! Video tutorial follows.

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup (180 g) of softened butter
  • 1/2 cup (85g) light brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup (100g) white sugar
  • 1 cup (240 ml) of no salt peanut butter (only ingredient should be "peanuts". Trader Joe's Creamy No Salt Peanut Butter is my favorite for this recipe
  • 1 Tbsp tsp (15 ml) vanilla
  • 1 egg
  • 1 ½ cup (180 g) flour
  • 1/2 tsp (2.5 ml) baking soda
  • 1 tsp (5 ml) salt

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350F (176C).
  2. In an electric mixer cream together butter and sugars until fluffy. Then add the peanut butter. And mix until combined.
  3. Then add the egg and vanilla beat to combine. Set aside.
  4. In a separate bowl whisk together flour, baking soda and salt. Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture, in thirds until everything is combined.
  5. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Then with a 2” ice cream scoop parcel out 6 dough balls. And then with a fork that has been lightly dipped in flour, create a cross hatch pattern on top of each ball, pressing dough the dough slightly at the same time.
  6. Bake for 13-15 mins.
  7. Allow to cool slightly and then transfer to a cooling rack. Enjoy!

Notes

High-quality peanut butter has one ingredient: peanuts! Avoid others with added sugar or salt. Pure peanut butter will create the best-tasting cookie!

For this recipe I prefer the Trader Joe's Creamy Peanut Butter, No Salt

Dip your fork in flour first before making the hash marks, this will prevent your fork from sticking.

Nutrition Information:

Yield: 18Serving Size: 1
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 32Total Fat: 2gSaturated Fat: 1gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 1gCholesterol: 22mgSodium: 21mgCarbohydrates: 3gFiber: 0gSugar: 2gProtein: 1g

Beth's Best Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe- Entertaining with Beth (2024)

FAQs

Why do they put fork marks in peanut butter cookies? ›

These early recipes do not explain why the advice is given to use a fork, though. The reason is that peanut butter cookie dough is dense, and unpressed, each cookie will not cook evenly. Using a fork to press the dough is a convenience of tool; bakers can also use a cookie shovel (spatula).

Why do you put a criss-cross on peanut butter cookies? ›

So it looks like that there are utilitarian reasons for the cross-hatching—to allow for even cooking—but it might have been passed along for nearly a hundred years for primarily aesthetic reasons, where the cross-hatching is more to identify the cookies as peanut butter ones, rather than to cook them well.

How to put lines in peanut butter cookies? ›

You can also line cookie sheets with parchment paper, which will make cleanup super easy after your baking project. Flatten in crisscross pattern with fork dipped into sugar. Bake 9 to 10 minutes or until light golden brown. Cool 5 minutes; remove from cookie sheet.

How old is the peanut butter cookie? ›

The peanut butter cookie was invented in the 1910's, when George Washington Carver of Alabama's Tuskegee Institute published a peanut cookbook in an effort to promote the crop.

What happens if you don't flatten peanut butter cookies? ›

If you don't flatten the cookies first, then the fork does double duty – it performs both functions. One very subtle result of creating the pattern is that the little tips of dough bake up crisper than the rest of the cookie, giving you both a bit of additional texture and deeper taste where the dough is more baked.

Why are my peanut butter cookies dry and crumbly? ›

If you're wanting to use natural (no sugar added) peanut butter, the cookies will be less sweet and they will likely spread out more. Using natural peanut butter will change the structure and texture of the cookies. Why are my cookies dry and crumbly? This is most likely a classic case of using too much flour.

Why do my peanut butter cookies taste weird? ›

Your other source of fat should be butter, not shortening. Butter will make your cookies taste buttery; shortening will make them taste suspiciously vacant, like Katy Perry's voice post-autotune. Yes, shortening yields chewier cookies than butter does, because butter contains water and shortening doesn't.

Should I let peanut butter cookie dough rest? ›

We prefer natural peanut butter here, so you can dial in the sugar and salt amounts precisely, and smooth peanut butter over crunchy to better control the cookies' fat and moisture levels. Letting the cookie dough rest ensures the flour is fully hydrated, resulting in crisper edges and chewier middles.

How to make peanut butter cookie mix taste better? ›

Peanut Butter Cookie Mix Hacks

Flavor Twist: After creating the dough according to the peanut butter cookie mix instructions, portion the dough into balls then roll in a tasty topping like poppy seeds, sesame seeds or sprinkles, or go for a 4:1 ratio of sugar and dry spice, like ground cinnamon or nutmeg.

How do you keep peanut butter cookies from flattening? ›

Use a silicone baking mat or parchment paper. Coating your baking sheet with nonstick spray or butter creates an overly greasy foundation, causing the cookies to spread. I always recommend a silicone baking mat because they grip onto the bottom of your cookie dough, preventing the cookies from spreading too much.

How do you know when peanut butter cookies are done? ›

Unlike many other cookies, peanut butter biscuits only fully harden once they've been removed from the oven. Here's how to tell when peanut butter cookies are done: The tops of the cookies are a uniform light brown. They're soft to the touch but not moist or mushy.

Why are my peanut butter cookies always hard? ›

If your peanut butter cookies are hard, you likely cooked them for too long. They should not be baked for more than 8 or 9 minutes.

Who made the first peanut butter cookie? ›

The peanut butter cookie was invented in the early 1910's by George Washington Carver.

How old is Skippy peanut butter? ›

SKIPPY® History

In 1933, Joseph Rosefield had the nutty idea to change the formula for peanut butter. He created SKIPPY® peanut butter, which was less sticky and longer-lasting. Peanut butter lovers fell in love, and spread the fun to their families and friends.

What are the peanut butter cookies from Girl Scouts called? ›

That's why some of our cookies look the same but have two different names. Whether the package says Peanut Butter Patties® or Tagalongs®, or Samoas® or Caramel deLites®, the cookies are similarly delicious.

Does the fork trick work for cookies? ›

My trusted method for getting ripply, jagged-topped cookies has been simple–scoop the cookie dough with two forks, or as I like to call it, forking your dough. Take two forks and rough up the dough a little bit. Use the tines of both forks to gather up as much dough as you want in a bundle.

Why do people poke fork holes in sugar cookies? ›

So by poking the holes in, the cookie. will ensure that the cookie shape does not spread, which sugar cookies love to do. It also helps it stay nice and flat at the top.

How to put fork marks in peanut butter cookies? ›

Using the long tines of a fork and pressing down on the dough ball twice , one vertically and one horizontally, flattens the dough evenly and leaves attractive marks. Win-win!

Do you have to flatten peanut butter cookies with a fork? ›

Pressing a fork into these peanut butter cookies prior to baking helps flatten the cookies slightly, promoting oven spread. The fork marks also encourage the cookies to bake more evenly and brown evenly.

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